Wikia is not accessible if you’ve made further modifications. Remove the custom ad blocker rule(s) and the page will load as expected.

Contents

The purpose of this table is to give an overview of all CHDK-capable cameras. It's concentrating on image capture capabilities, not on optical or usability ones.
The sensor's raw resolution and physical dimensions may indicate that

camera models, whose sensors share the same size, technology and raw resolution may have been built with the same sensor. A certain sensor model always has the same capabilities, even if the camera doesn't use them (this applies to movie modes - frame rate and/or resolution).

DIGIC II doesn't seem to be able to provide sensor liveview with more than one resolution at the same time. Later DIGIC (III or later) can do that. On DIGIC II cameras in hi-res movie mode, the framebuffers use a vertical resolution that is provided by the sensor. On later DIGIC, the framebuffers already contain a pre-resized image.

Earlier CCD models with a 60fps low-res movie mode have a short time limit in that mode. Reason unknown (marketing?). Exceptions: TX-1 (this one seems to have greater processing power anyway), S3IS (according to official specs), S5IS (according to official specs).

Cameras with remote liveview (rc indication in notes) use the movie video encoder routine (mjpeg) for video compression. One of the latest remote controllable cameras is the G10. It's pretty special: DIGIC 4, uses h.264 for video encoding in movies but also has the mjpeg encoder routine for remote liveview.